That Bill is a fan of sci-fi… and that’s why it took her longer to grok the true nature of the TARDIS – she knows sci-fi is make-believe, and she also knows that what she’s experiencing now is real, so therefore, she finds all sorts of different explanations for the TARDIS interior.

Photos of River and Susan on the Doctor’s desk. …And the way he looked at Susan’s picture when Bill asked “Why me?” (The feels!)

That she challenged the Doctor on “TARDIS” – if he’s an alien, why did he pick English words for his acronym? (The answer is, I think, that Susan did, when she fell in love with Earth England, 1963)

That the Doctor made the distinction between “Evil” and “Dangerous.”

And– most of all– how Bill insisted on her autonomy, and refused to let him mind-wipe her.

Other things I liked:

She knew what a Police Telephone Box was! This means she has educated herself about British history/culture from before her time. Is she the first companion of the Modern Era to know what it is? I think she is. A nice little detail that fleshes out her character. I know Amy had to have it explained to her in this between-episodes scene from Series 5. And Rose, too. What about Donna?

Also: The Doctor asking why she never applied – another, subtle, clue that he really has no idea how Earth Money and Poverty work (Q.V. Eleven showing up with a bag of cash in “The Lodger”). Again: a single line that fleshes out/confirms his character.

Moira’s cell phone convo with Bill – and the follow-up scene where Bill goes to confront whoever has invaded the bathroom. Shows that Moira has a habit of hooking up with dodgy partners, and that “Barry” is a violently jealous type. Despite technically being the Child, between the two of them, Bill has probably lived her whole live acting like the Grown-Up (a fate common among foster kids, unfortunately).

I’ve seen a few review videos that thought the story was weaker, because the threat was “small.” But I liked that. Sometimes, saving one person is as important as saving a planet full of people.

When Bill asked what changed his mind, he said: “Time … and Relative Dimensions in Space.” His (first) wife “talked” some sense into him! ;-) … As she has from nearly the beginning.

Things I wonder about:

Who is the woman who keeps eyeing the Doctor, and he eyeing her back? Bill interpreted that as “perving.” But that’s not in Twelve’s character. I suspect she will come up again as a Baddie later in the series.

At the end, when the Doctor says: “I can’t! I promised!” Who did he make that promise to?

Apparently, the Intelligent Space Oil absorbed the dalek when it tried to exterminate “Heather”… Does that mean that the Dalek is now the “Passenger”? And if so, will that alter the Dalek’s personality (as with “Rusty” in "Into the Dalek" in Series 8)?

A couple of things that made me uncomfortable:

When Bill said, of a student in the canteen: "I fatted her." Setting up a dichotomy between being fat and being beautiful struck me as being unnecessarily petty. OTOH, we later see the two of them exchanging winks and grins. So it's clear that "beauty" is irrelevant to Bill.

When Bill asked: "Are we safe?" and the Doctor said: "Well, it's Nardole, so probably not." That bothered me far more. It's obviously a line written for the audience to laugh at. But the Doctor is talking about someone he's chosen to be his partner and helper. So it strikes me as out of character for him to express his disrespect, like that.

Thoughts I've had since posting these thoughts on Tumblr:

Did you notice that, when Bill asked: "Can we save her (Heather)?" the Doctor did not say: "No. She's gone. She's beyond saving."? And when Bill said: "Goodbye, Heather." Heather said: "Goodbye, ... Bill." (Not echoing the exact words back)? That means the human mind is still in there, somewhere... And when the Doctor invited Bill onto the TARDIS, he said: "It's a big universe, but maybe we'll find her."

...I really hope Pearl Mackie stays on the show for more than the 12 episodes of Series 10 -- so we get to see her for at least one adventure with whomever Peter Capaldi regenerates into. But if she has to leave at the end of this season, I hope that's why. I hope she gets to help rescue Heather, and decides to leave the Doctor, and settle down with her new-found love.

I've only watched "Smile" once, so far, so this section will be brief.

First off, when I saw the trailers/introductions for this episode, I had a sinking feeling, because "Robot Apocalypse" is a trope I wish would die forever. But the story was saved by how the conflict was resolved: Yes, the A.I. have become sentient -- therefore, stop treating them like your slaves/property -- and treat them as members of an alien civilization, instead.

Yes. Good. My point exactly.

Second: I got a very strong Ark in Space vibe from this -- And there was a line where the Doctor said he'd seen other colonies. So I wonder if that was deliberate callback to the Tom Baker story. I really liked the memorial altar to the old woman who had died -- and the implication that she was Storyteller of the colony -- so much more organic than files of microfilm (!! How much further we have actually come **Into the FUTURE** than we could have imagined in 1975!).

And did anyone else notice the other main difference between the story from 42 years ago and today's story? ...In "Ark," the catastrophe that drove humans off Earth was an impending asteroid strike. But those images that came up when Bill looked through the "book" that was laid at the old woman's feet certainly looked like a recording of the rise of a violent police state, and the outbreak of global war and genocide.

Steven Moffat and other official spokespeople can make all the protestations they want about how: "Our show is a fantastical science fiction romp! We're not out to make Statements about politics!"

But if that's the way the pudding whistles in the copper... More power to them! If art and pop culture can't save us, now, I don't know what can.

And finally, I loved how, even after Bill learned that she and the Doctor were under serious threats to their lives, she was still genuinely happy -- that she didn't have to put on a fake smile -- because she was out in the universe learning something new.

The more I read about this season to date, the more I am thinking about finally shelling out the money for a season pass on Amazon Prime... but there are other books and DVDs to get and yet Billy sounds so delightful!

I know people like to buy things to support but if one is impecunious like I am people also like to share. Promise this link isn't anything hienious just someone else trying to help; goo.gl/3KTI5n. (I'm a librarian who thinks everything should be available to everyone for personal study and education. I keep lists of locations like this.)

Of course, shortly after I typed that, I came upon a fan discussion YouTube video were they were all working under the assumption that she is leaving ... But a quick Internet search has pulled up no official news in that direction from the Beeb, so... I don't know?

Yes, Susan invented the name TARDIS according to her own reports. But the word also seems widely known throughout the universe as the word for Time Lord time capsule though I can't think of any examples at the moment, and dialog in The Deadly Assassin shows that to Time Lords TARDIS is the word for all Type 40s. So Susan must have invented the word before their initial departure from Gallifrey while in a position that it got adopted generally. There is some other explanation than that Susan made the name up on Earth, and if I come up with it over the summer it'll be one of the first Three Faces cartoons in the fall.

"Tardis" could just be the Gallifreyan word for transdimensional traveling capsule. And Susan noticed that, in English (a language she was falling in love with), it just so happened to fit an acronym that explained what it was.

Like "gorp" (trail mix) doesn't really derive from "Good ol' Raisins n' Peanuts," but rather, from an Old Norse word meaning to "eat greedily" (same root as "gobble"). But as an acronym, you know exactly what you're getting.

I'm liking it so far, too. I like Bill. She's nothing like Clara (thank gods), or any other previous companion. She's enjoying the adventure, and challenging the Doctor. She's very much a Millennial, in a good way.

...Or whatever generation comes after the millennials (the oldest of whom are now in their mid-30s).

I thoroughly support Moffat and what I suspect is the agenda he set out for his tenure (going back over RTD's changes in the Doctor/Companion relationship). But sometimes, even people you agree with can go a step (or six) too far.

With 9/10 and Rose, Davies set up an implicit romantic/sexual relationship between a 900+ year old alien, who had the most control over the ship they were traveling in and a 19-year old human who'd never traveled so far away from home as University (you will never convince me that was anything but impaired consent).

Moffat a) made the next companion have her own human partner (someone she grew up with), and b) tried to give the Doctor his own romantic interest with a somewhat more equal balance of power -- a fellow time traveler who was better at piloting the TARDIS than he was. Moffat had to create a multi-season plot more tangled than the Gordian knot to do it, thanks to Davies writing the other Timelords out of existence, but he managed it in the end.

Clara seems to have been Moffat's attempt to undo the unhealthy hero-worship dynamic between companion and Doctor, by reversing the roles: what if the Doctor worshiped his companion? But there were two problems with this:

There was no natural reason for the Doctor to feel that way toward any of his companions, so Moffat had to create a way for Clara to be the Doctor's savior that simply didn't fit the universe. And -- most important -- It's an unhealthy relationship dynamic any way you slice it, and was painful to watch.

Sometimes, even when you know you're right, you have to walk away from the argument. Clara was that point.